Kamrooz Aram

Kamrooz Aram

Ancient Blue Ornament


January 11, 2018 – April 1, 2018

Kamrooz Aram utilizes painting, sculpture, and photography to examine the intersections between ornamental art, which has often been deemed “minor” throughout Western art history, and Modernism with its great phobia of the ornamental. His painterly works transcend the specter of the decorative, blending patterns derived from Persian carpets with geometric patterns common in vernacular modern European architecture. 

Aram challenges the viewer to consider the exhibition space as an architectural whole. Using exhibition design as a unifying form, he dismantles the hierarchy between the objects on display, the mechanisms of display such as pedestals, and the architecture of the museum itself. An antique carpet might be displayed along with genuine antiquities, replica ceramics found in a museum gift shop, or objects the artist has designed or made himself, in order to question the way that we assign value to such objects. Aram challenges what he refers to as the false neutrality of the museum. Whether we are engaging art in an encyclopedic museum with linen-lined vitrines, or a white-cube contemporary art space such as this one, we are never viewing art objects in a neutral space. Every aspect, including architectural details, informs the way that we perceive the objects on display.

Aram even introduces his own architectural forms, the Ancient Blue Ornament from which this exhibition takes its title, which can be characterized as simultaneously architectural, sculptural, even functional. These objects replicate an ornamental architectural detail from Persepolis, the ceremonial capital of the Persian Achaemenid Empire (ca. 550-330 BC). These disorienting objects reference both the ancient and modern, and the relationship between the two. Constructed from Formica, a material commonly used for kitchen counters and office desks, they suggest a functionality one associates with furniture. Is the Ancient Blue Ornament a sculpture? An architectural detail? A prop to compliment the paintings? Or simply a piece of furniture? The artist presents an interdependence of forms, an exhibition environment where no element exists without the support of the others.  

This exhibition is made possible by Leontine Ebers and Real Floors, Inc.

Bio

Kamrooz Aram

Kamrooz Aram was born in 1978 in Shiraz, Iran, and currently lives in Brooklyn. He received an MFA from Columbia University in 2003 and a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 2001. He has shown internationally and nationally, including solo exhibitions at the Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Deurle, Belgium; Green Art Gallery, Dubai; The Suburban, Chicago; LA><ART, Los Angeles; and the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams. Aram’s work has been shown in many group exhibitions, including Beauty Reigns: A Baroque Sensibility in Recent Painting, McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, 2014; the Busan Biennale, 2006; Greater New York2005, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center and The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2005; and the Prague Biennale I, 2003. Public collections that include his work are The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio; and M+, Hong Kong. He has an upcoming solo exhibition at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.


Courtesy of the artist and Green Art Gallery, Dubai

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